- on messenger, it's full of ads and unnecessary features like filters on calls, and the video chat is bad quality. message is now unsearchable.
- on whatsapp, same thing, it's now also unsearchable.
- on telegram, great ux and its strength lies in its bot api but i had a hard time signing up with new accounts (it bans aggressively now).
- on slack, good contender, but for work only, not personal stuff.
telegram used to be my bias but it started getting enshitified in the past three years since they started monetizing it aggressively.
on twitter / x, it's not searchable too, it crashes on my android. but i like how it's monetized in a way that it makes me pay $1 monthly to prove im not a bot, and i can pay extra to remove all ads and have a smooth xp.
I discovered that Google Chat is now integrated in the Gmail app and I am loving it because:
- the chat is smooth and searchable (very very important)
- the audio / video quality is better.
- can send images, videos, gifs, etc.
- almost everyone has a gmail anyway so I can just easily chat them up.
- it's viewable on web and mobile.
- the notifications just works.
- it's free, we bought google workspace and surprised it's a part of it already, and i can chat with other people who are gmail users.
Anyone with similar exp? If not, what do you use and why?
There's only one thing on the internet that decays faster than Javascript frameworks, and that's Google chat apps.
Google Chat (or at least some variation of it) has been available in Gmail for 10+ YEARS. At the time I had a pixel phone, and it seamlessly integrated regular GChat with SMS, so they were all searchable.
Then they proceeded to completely donk it up and half of my old records disappeared overnight. Fortunately I make regular use of the "Google Takeout" service so I still have the old XML backups of the conversations.
There appears to be no way to disable the misfeature of Enter dispatching your draft message into the channel. (Short of monkey patching the logic with some client side script tweak thing?)
When you let coders decide messaging UX, make sure some of them are multi-paragraph communicators, not just one liner shooters-from-the-hip.
I'm going to have to look into this client-side hack because I am going to have to use this daily, and it is a nonstarter.
You know what would be cool: a browser extension that could somehow do this for any edit window (that you pick with an object picker like in uBlock Origin). The extension would interpose itself into the input handling for that object and perhaps do something like convert Enter to Shift Enter, and vice versa. Or just glboally?
Could this point to the solution?
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/45869813/is-there-a-way-...
how old are you?